Monday, December 31, 2007

Va'era

One of the ways in which we show our devotion to G'd and Torah is through the placement of mezuzot throughout our homes. Arlene Groch recently started her own webstore featuring her beautiful mezuzot. Arlene Groch has painted, sculpted, and created jewelry for decades. During the past several years polymer clay has been her chosen medium --- and her passion --- because it is incredibly versatile as well as light-weight and durable. Individual pieces may contain Swarovsky crystals, gold filled or sterling silver wire, or other fine materials. The colors, patterns, textures and forms of jewelry and Mezuzah cases you'll see on this site were created by blending the clays to create unique colors, and/or by painting, sculpting, carving, stamping, silk-screening, texturing, curing, sanding and polishing. The design possibilities are endless, thus fostering experimentation and creativity.


In this week's parsha VA'AERA God tells Moses God's true name, Yud - Hey - Vav - Hey, saying that God had appeared to our ancestors as El Shaddai. God promises Moses that He will bring the people forth from Egypt. The people do not listen to Moses because their spirits have been downtrodden. Moses and Aaron go before Pharaoh. Aaron throws down his rod and it turns into a snake. Pharaoh's magicians do the same, turning their rods into snakes, but Aaron's rod swallows their rods.

With this we begin the story of the Ten Plagues. This portion tells the story of the first seven plagues the story of the last three plagues is told next week. Moses and Aaron meet Pharaoh at the Nile River early in the morning. Aaron strikes the river with his rod and the river turns to blood. All the fish die. This plague is followed in this week's reading by frogs, lice, swarms of flies or wild animals, cattle disease, boils, and a fiery hail. Each time Pharaoh hardens his heart, and refuses to let the Israelites go.

The plagues seem to come in sets of three. The first of each three is preceded by Moses asking Pharaoh to let the people go, with a warning about what is to come. The second is done in front of Pharaoh. The third is done outside Pharaoh's presence. The plagues build up towards a climax, ending next week with the slaying of the firstborns.

For the first number of plagues, the Torah says that Pharaoh hardened his heart or the heart of Pharaoh was hardened. Only after the sixth plague does it say that God hardened Pharaoh's heart. It seems that if someone does the wrong act often enough, it becomes second nature, as if God is doing it.

Tuesday, December 25, 2007

A basket of history

Going to fight the throngs at Universal Studio's Island of Adventures today. What we do in the name of parenthood! Have a great day... I will probably not post again until Friday. Until then, be well and enjoy Boxing Day!


Telling Our Story


A number of Ethiopian Israeli potters, embroiderers and basket weavers continue creating their ancient crafts, defying acculturation and lack of respect by other Ethiopians. But how long can they sustain their distinctive art when they’ve lost their traditional way of life?
by Ruth Mason


In and around her village of Burgmaski in Ethiopia, Tasmaj Mengistu was well-known for the strong and beautiful clay pots she made. They fetched higher than usual prices from villagers for miles around who use clay vessels for cooking and storage. Like all rural Ethiopian Jewish women, Mengistu dug and made her own clay in a laborious, muddy process and fired the pots herself in an outdoor pit. But unlike most of them, in addition to using the pots she made for her daily needs, she earned her living -- and fed her 15 children -- from her craft.

Mengistu learned how to make pottery by watching her mother and grandmother, as did Ethiopian Jewish women for centuries before her. When she was a girl, Mengistu says: “My mother would make a pot without the neck and leave it to go to the market. When she came back, I would have shaped the neck and finished it.”

When she came to Israel with her family during operation Moses in 1985, Mengistu was lucky to be assigned a ground floor apartment in the absorption center in Mevasseret Zion. There, she could sit on the ground, as was her custom in her native land, and shape and fire her pots. She found that in Israel, the best clay could be dug in the ground of the Negev desert. Her small bedroom in the absorption center overflowed with clay jars, jugs, pots and pitchers. She sold some of her work when the immigrants first arrived and interest was high. Then sales plummeted. But Mengistu kept working. It was what she knew and what she loved.

Three years ago, Mengistu’s family moved to an apartment on a higher floor in Petach Tikvah. While she still embroiders, weaves baskets and does other crafts with what one Israeli ceramicist calls her “magic hands,” Mengistu no longer has access to the outdoor environment she needs to practice her ancient craft.

Like Mengistu’s pottery, traditional Ethiopian Jewish women’s arts and crafts -- clay household utensils (jugs, pots) as well as decorative and sculptural pottery; intricate, colorful embroidery, and colorful woven baskets -- are on the verge of extinction. Almost the entire population of Ethiopian Jews is now in Israel and many factors contribute to the dwindling of traditional crafts. While there are small heroic efforts nurtured by a few passionate people around the country, and while there have been many museum exhibits, most Ethiopian women no longer practice the crafts that were so much a part of their lives in Ethiopia.

Many factors contribute to the dwindling of traditional crafts. Observers say it is a complex subject, fraught with ambivalence.

In Ethiopia, every Jewish woman who lived in a village, as most of them did, practiced some craft out of necessity. Jewish men in Ethiopia were also the ones in the society who did skilled handwork: church paintings, soldering, weaving, and blacksmithing. It was because of their association with fire and ash, that the Jews were called buda, and were feared and hated. It’s not surprising then, that most Beta Yisrael, as the Ethiopian Jews call themselves, have mixed feelings about their traditional crafts.

“In Ethiopia this wasn’t seen as art or even as craft,” says Shula Mola, a young Ethiopian Israeli leader. “It wasn’t for art’s sake; it was for household use and to earn a living.” Mola remembers having to wake up early to prepare the clay for her mother before she went to school. “It was looked down upon,” she says. “There was a stigma attached to it. It was the work of Jews. Working the land was work of a high status, but most Jews in Ethiopia didn’t own land. That’s why they were forced to work in crafts which the non-Jews wouldn’t touch.”

What we think of as folk art was not done for self-expression, Mola explains. “Women expressed themselves in other ways, either as wise women who were looked up to and sought out for advice to solve problems, or as traditional spiritual healers,” she says.

Tenat Awaka, one of the most highly regarded Ethiopian potters in Israel, feels the lack of status and respect in her own life. While she has been encouraged and supported by Israelis and American Jews who value her work, most Ethiopians don’t appreciate it. “They say: ‘It wasn’t enough she got herself dirty in Ethiopia, she has to get herself dirty here, too?’ It’s seen as shameful, as low status. But I love it. I’ve exhibited in places where I’ve been the one Ethiopian out of 15 Israelis.

I get honor from my work -- but not from Ethiopians.”

Awaka, who ran away from her husband’s home after she was married at age seven, was raised by her grandparents. She learned to make pottery by watching her grandmother. “I would steal clay from her and take it outside where she wouldn’t see me,” she recalls. “I made a sheep, then a monkey, then a woman nursing a baby and sold them to tourists. I didn’t show her the money. When I finally told her what I was up to, I said I wanted to go to school half-time and work half-time and she said O.K.”

Awaka is unusual in that she taught pottery in Ethiopia, first at an ORT school and later in a non-Jewish Ethiopian school. The vast majority of Jewish women did not work outside the home. The principal of the latter school so valued her work that he did not give her the letters that arrived from home saying her family was preparing to go to Sudan so they could be taken to Israel. When she came home and found no one there, she nearly went crazy, she says. She tried to follow them to the Sudan, walking 14 days to get there, but when she arrived, she found her family had been flown to Israel the day before. Awaka went back to Ethiopia and eventually married and had a child, spending nearly two years in Addis Ababa before being able to join her family in Israel.

Today, Awaka is one of several Ethiopian women around the country doing clay sculpture. Like most of them, she sculpts scenes from the Bible or from her life in Ethiopia, scenes that serve to both express her ties to her past and to illustrate to Israelis and others what Ethiopian Jewish life was like. Sometimes, Awaka says, she likes to sculpt her dreams. Her charming male and female figurines, solitary and interacting in groups, are based on a cylindrical body upon which a large head rests. Her large jugs are decorated with simple etched geometric patterns and some of the lidded pots are topped with sculptured bird figures (symbolizing the longing for Jerusalem). Like the other artists, Awaka works with low-fire clay that remains unglazed. Unlike the others, she uses a modern potter’s wheel. She also weaves baskets.

Esti Rozman, an artist who headed a American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee (JDC) project to encourage Ethiopian artists after Operation Solomon, says Ethiopian Jewish art transmits a lot of information about their culture and values. It’s a way to understand a people who came from a completely different world. She refers to Awaka’s sculpture of a cow with a full udder and under it a calf and a human baby. “Children in Ethiopia would go to the cow and take a shluk,” she says. “When there’s a cow at home, there is everything.”

Rozman is typical of the handful of Israeli women who have made it their life’s work to preserve and encourage Ethiopian art in Israel. She feels a deep attraction for the Ethiopians and their culture. “There’s something about them that is so beautiful, so basic; it arouses feelings of longing,” she says.

Awaka is part of a group of eight talented women potters represented by Dorit Katzir from the village of Klil in northern Israel. Katzir fell in love with Ethiopian Jewish folk art when she worked at a gallery and studio established in Chatzrot Yassaf, the biggest of the caravan (trailer home) sites set up for the initial absorption of the large Ethiopian aliyah. When the caravan site closed down, Katzir took eight potters under her wing and looked high and low for support for them to continue their work. When all her attempts to find funds and sponsors failed, she used her last two months’ salary from a teaching job to open a small gallery in her home.

Katzir travels throughout the north where the women now live -- bringing them clay, taking their work to be fired and marketing it. “I’m collapsing,” she says. “But the satisfaction is tremendous. The quality of their work is on an international level. There isn’t very much written about Ethiopian Jewish life. These women tell in clay the untold story of a community.” Like many who work with Ethiopians, Katzir has fallen in love. “We’re like soul sisters,” she says. “They call me ema (mother).”

Esther David, 28, is one of two younger Ethiopian women who make pottery in Israel today, and both she and her mother, Ude, are in Katzir’s group. With the move to Israel, Ethiopian women have stopped teaching their daughters pottery. Says Belaynesh Ferdu, a potter who lives in Lod: “I don’t want my kids to do it. I want them to study so they have a good future and can earn a living.”


David began working in clay a few years ago, after her children were born, in order to supplement the family’s income. “In Ethiopia, I did it as a game,” she says. “I copied my mother but I didn’t do it seriously. But after I started having children, I needed the money, so I sat with my mother and I began. I succeeded.”

David’s work depicts kessim (the Ethiopian equivalent of a rabbi), women giving birth (they kneel on the floor), men playing traditional musical instruments, women carrying water from the well, the special tukul (hut) used by menstruating women, and other scenes of Jewish village life in Ethiopia. “All are about life in Ethiopia,” she says.

She chooses these topics, she explains, because it does her good to show and express what she knows and what she experienced. “And also, people buy it because they want to know our story,” David says. “It represents our culture. With your tools and your skill, you can show people what [Ethiopian Jewish] life was like. If we don’t pass this on to our children, it will disappear. It’s really a shame.”

David says she and her mother work when there is clay, but it isn’t always available. “Dorit brings us clay when she has orders,” she says. “But today, it’s hard to sell. There are no tourists.”

Belaynesh Ferdu’s pieces also tell the story of Jewish life in Ethiopia -- a life that has just about vanished. She shows us a kes holding a Torah scroll, and a woman carrying a water jug. She also brings a ceramic “love box” or “Solomon’s box” (depicting King Solomon and the Queen of Sheba). When you take off the cover, you see a man and woman lying down and embracing. According to Ferdu, this little box has taken the place of the margam godjo (house of the curse), the menstruating hut. The box sits by the couple’s bed, she says, and is closed when the woman has her period and is left open when she doesn’t. (Others say the box can be used by couples to indicate if one of them wants to make love: If the offer is accepted the box is left open.) Ferdu creates three or four items a day and enjoys the work, she says, “because it’s traditional. I make things that show the way of life in Ethiopia so we don’t forget it.”

While making pottery and small clay figurines (which resemble archeological finds in ancient Israel and are seen as proof of the community’s direct link with their forbears) was a traditional art form for Jews in Ethiopia, the types of clay sculptures made by Ferdu began appearing with the first tourists to Jewish areas in the 1950s, when Ethiopian Jewish women realized they could use their talents to sell figurines depicting village life.

Tadfaleche Ayaleyu sits on a cushioned bench and embroiders tiny stitches in a strip she is working on that will be part of a tablecloth. While her work is tedious and meticulous, Ayaleyu has the serene and deeply calm look of many Ethiopian women. She is one of hundreds of women around the country (sometimes up to 1,000 when there is a big order) who embroider for Almaz, an Ethiopian handicrafts workshop that turns their traditional embroidery skills into a marketable commodity. Almaz, which means diamond in Amharic, Russian and Arabic, is the most enduring. Although it is struggling, perhaps the most successful of the handful of projects that encourage Ethiopian folk arts.

Begun 12 years ago by Mickey Shapiro, a woman with a mission, at its height, Almaz employed 20 full-time seamstresses. Now there are nine full-time workers making clothes and other items from the pieces embroidered by Ethiopian women in their homes. Ayaleyu usually works at home, but she comes to the Almaz workshop today with two other women – a potter and a weaver of the colorful woven baskets used by Ethiopians for storage -- to show their work to Na’amat Woman.

Ayaleyu, who is in her 60s, has been embroidering since the age of 20. She learned from a friend. Her mother had a different skill – she specialized in spinning cotton. In Ethiopia, she explains, embroidery was used to decorate bridal clothes, tablecloths and bedspreads. “Embroidery is knowledge and skill and I enjoy it,” she says through an interpreter. “It frees my mind and helps me think about other things.”

Aviva Rachamim, an Ethiopian staff member at Almaz who is interpreting for the women, says they do their crafts to keep tradition, to make money and “to teach a new culture about our ways.”

It was with these three goals in mind that fashion and fabric designer Shapiro founded Almaz after Operation Solomon. “It started with the fact that I love Ethiopians,” she says. “In 1992, I saw the new aliyah and it touched my heart. I saw an opportunity to fulfill my dream of starting an ethnic fashions project with Ethiopians. I foresaw the tragedy that could happen to these people if they didn’t have honorable work.” Almaz currently provides a livelihood for 100 Ethiopian families.

The front room of the two-room bungalow that serves as Almaz’s workshop in Lod is filled with wall hangings, embroidered mezuzot, racks of embroidered dresses and cubbies full of embroidered challah covers, shirts and tablecloths. Shapiro designs the items based on traditional Ethiopian Jewish patterns and they are sold by order (an order for 4,000 tablecloths has just come in from the workers’ committee of the Ports Authority for holiday gifts) at the plant and in their small store in Tel Aviv. Originally supported by the JDC, Almaz gets government funding and sells about a half a million shekels worth of goods a year.

“Most Ethiopian women who work get unskilled, low paying jobs,” says Shapiro. “We get the women out of the house, give them paying work that uses their talents -- and the children of these women do better in school. It was a struggle, because people tell the women that if they go out to work, they’ll lose their social benefits. But we give them something else: self-respect. In addition to providing salaries, we make them into better citizens.”

Along with Almaz and Dorit Katzir’s group, several other initiatives encourage Ethiopian traditional arts. In Beersheva, which has the largest Ethiopian population in Israel, the Taubel Community Center provides space and material for potters. Tova Mered, the director of this Ethiopian Jewish Handicrafts Workshop at Taubel, says that because of the stigma associated with it, it took a long time to even get the women to admit that they could do pottery. Today, they teach their traditional methods to Israelis. There is also a group of Ethiopian women potters in Netivot which sells their work to Almaz, among other places. Another is Esra, an organization of English-speaking immigrants in the center of the country.

NA’AMAT's Umanit School for Arts and Crafts in Karmiel, where there is a sizeable Ethiopian population, runs a workshop for 12 Ethiopian women. Here they work with clay and produce the typical Ethiopian figurines. "We also introduce them to different types of materials and techniques," says Edith Abaud, chairperson of Na'amat in Karmiel. "We feel it's important to preserve the activities they were used to doing in Ethiopia. We also include single mothers and we speak in Hebrew during the workshop. It's another attempt to ease their social integration." Na'amat also runs a support group for 15 Ethiopian single mothers that includes workshops in various art forms, she adds.

In general, these efforts get little support. And while the Israeli women behind them work tirelessly to advance and preserve an endangered art form, their efforts are a drop in the bucket.

One type of traditional Ethiopian craft has already disappeared. The small, crude figurines, which were featured in a Beersheva Museum exhibit in 1993 where they were compared with archeological finds from ancient Israel, are no longer being made, says Galia Gavish, who was the museum’s director and the curator of the exhibit.

But perhaps new hope is springing up in the form of young, Israeli-trained Ethiopian artists. While they don’t engage in the traditional folk arts, they feel powerfully tied to their tradition.

Zemen Gedamu, 24, who is a first-year student at Shenkar School of Fashion Design in Tel Aviv, explores Ethiopian themes in all her art work. Although she left Ethiopia at five, she has “sweet memories,” she says. “We are an amazing community that preserved itself for thousands of years and is now going to ruin. For me, drawing things I remember from life in Ethiopia and from the memories of the traumatic trek to and stay in Sudan is a kind of therapy. It’s what I have that’s unique and it always finds its way into my work. I am pulled by the beauty and by the pain.”

Does she think she will use Ethiopian Jewish themes in her fashion designs?

“I don’t think, I know, I will,” she says. “It’s my chance to bring out things from our culture that haven’t been seen.”

Gedamu and other young Ethiopian artists whose art depicts their roots are defying the forces of acculturation that, despite lip service paid to preserving a rich and ancient culture, push toward modernization.

“It’s taken the Moroccans and the Tunisians 50 years of being cut off from their rich and beautiful culture to go back and search for their roots,” says Tova Mered. “With the Ethiopians, we have an opportunity to circumvent that process. But I suppose we’re not yet mature enough as a culture to be able to create a bridge between the past and the future.”

Monday, December 24, 2007

Enter into Exodus...Parashat Shemot



I am posting early today- this Kiddush cup with a scene by Robin Jensen. The Cup depicts baby Moses' basket floating from mother to Egyptian princess while Miriam looks on. Base has reeds and leaves.

I am posting early because we are in Orlando soaking up the rays... and I don't know when I will be able to post again. Have a great dinner of Chinese Food today!

Exodus 1:1 - 6:1

In the years following Joseph’s death, the Israelites became a sizable group within Egypt. Pharaoh, worried about a potential fifth column in the event of a war, enslaved the Children of Israel and had them build store-cities. He also ordered the Hebrew midwives to kill all newborn Israelite males, but the midwives disobeyed at the risk of their own lives. Thereupon, Pharaoh ordered all newborn sons to be drowned in the Nile.

One Israelite couple, from the tribe Levi, spares their newborn son. When they can conceal him no longer they set him afloat in the Nile in a basket, while his older sister, Miriam, watches from a distance. Pharaoh’s daughter finds the boy and adopts him as her own. She names him Moses, and at the suggestion of Miriam, who has now come forward, she engages the boy’s mother as his nursemaid.

Moses grows up in the royal palace, but he retains a compassion for the enslaved Israelites. He slays an Egyptian overseer who is beating a Hebrew. The next day he intervenes in a quarrel between two Hebrews, and one of them asks if Moses will slay him, too, as he had the Egyptian.

Moses realizes that his life is in danger and he flees to Midian where he works as a shepherd for Jethro, a Midianite priest. Moses marries Jethro’s daughter, Tziporrah, and they have two sons.

While out shepherding, Moses sees an unusual sight – a bush is covered in flames but otherwise undamaged – and he approaches it. God speaks to Moses at the bush and tells him that he will be God’s messenger to Pharaoh and lead the Israelites out of bondage. God reveals his personal name to Moses and equips him with the power to perform certain wondrous deeds with which he will convince both the Israelites and Egyptians of his divine mission. These serve to reassure a reluctant Moses to return to Egypt.

Friday, December 21, 2007

Five Elements of the Jewish Blessing



Irene Konig demonstrates two ways versions of the priestly blessing. As you stroll through Irene's website you will see how her art is inspired by her Jewish roots and personal spirituality.

“He blessed them, giving each the blessing appropriate to him” Genesis 49:28.
There are many variations on how the blessing is made in Jewish homes today. The most
common custom is for the father to put his hands on the child's head and recite the blessing. In some homes the blessing is followed by a kiss, and in other homes it is followed by personalwords of praise. In some homes the mother gives the blessing together with the father, in other homes the mother gives the blessing in addition to the father, and still in other homes the mother gives the blessing instead of the father. In some homes each child gets up at the table and stands
before the parent to get the blessing, and in other homes the parent walks around the table and blesses each seated child.
Whatever procedure followed, the blessing is sure to make the child feel special and loved and give the child fond memories of family-together time. In the book entitled The Blessing (Pocket Books, 1986), Gary Smalley and John Trent give five elements that were important to blessings that parents gave to children in the Bible.

Read about the five elements here.

Shabbat Shalom!

Thursday, December 20, 2007

Listen up...



Our sages teach us that the original recitation of the phrase "Shema Yisrael Hashem Elokaynu Hashem Echad" dates back to our Father Jacob. We are taught that at the close of Yaakov's life he called all of his children to his bed side to say farewell and reveal the destiny of the Jewish people. When he was unsuccessful sharing his visions and divine insights regarding the future of the Jewish people he grew despondent and concerned that perhaps his children (the original children of Israel) were not true to the G-d of Israel. At that anxiety filled moment Jacob's children recited in unison "Shema Yisrael... Echad". This provided comfort and fulfillment to him at the closing moments of life on this earth.

Does your congregation recite the words of the Shema loudly and then follow in a whisper or silently with the words Baruch Shem K'vod Malchuto L'olam vaed? Do you know why this custom arose? Aparently while on his deathbed, Jacob was bestowing his last bits of knowlege upon his sons. Upon hearing his words, his sons cry out "Shema Yisrael (Jacob’s other name)—O listen Israel, the Lord is our God, the Lord is One," and Jacob, so weak he can barely speak, says "Baruch shem kavod…" Because Jacob said it in a whisper, so do we.

Michelle and David Plachte-Zuieback designed this installation for Temple Valley Beth Shalom of Encino, California. This couple's interest & exploration of religious themes has been encouraged by their work as stained glass specialists for UAHC Camp Swig Institute for Living Judaism, where they have offered an intensive stained glass workshops for junior high & high school students annualy, since 1983.

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Today is Asarah B'tevet


Naim Basson was born in Iraq in 1935 and immigrated to Israel in 1950. He studied painting and sculpture at the Avni Institute in Tel Aviv and at various art academies. Basson's wall paintings, reliefs and sculpture can be viewed in Maalot, at the Diplomat Hotel in Tel Aviv, the Marina Hotel in Bat Yam, the Caesar Hotel in Eilat, the Eyal Hotel in Eilat, the Tirat Hacarmel Hospital, the First International Bank in Tel Aviv, a 250 square meter relief at the Caesar Halls in Bat Yam and the biggest mezuzah in the world (4.8 meters) at the Israel Experience in Jaffa. Basson's works of art are exhibited in the collections of museums and galleries in Israel and the world over.

The Tenth of Tevet (also known as Asarah b’Tevet) is a fasting day in the Jewish calendar. Such is its importance that it is the only fasting day which, when it falls on a Friday, is observed fully. Other fasting days are moved if this occurs, so as not to interfere with preparations for the Sabbath. It occurs either 7 or 8 days after the last day of Hanukkah (depending on whether Rosh Chodesh of Tevet in that year lasts for one or two days).

The Tenth of Tevet is one of four fasting days that commemorate dark times in Jewish history. Tisha b’Av commemorates the destructions of the two Temples in Jerusalem. The breaching of the Jerusalem walls by the Roman Legions (70BC) is remembered on the 17th of Tammuz, and Tzom Gedaliah marks the commemoration of the assassination of Gedaliah ben Achikam, the Babylonian-appointed Jewish Governor of Judah.

The Tenth of Tevet marks the onset of the siege of Jerusalem by Nebuchadrezzar of Babylon, which led to the destruction of Solomon’s Temple (often known as The First Temple) and Babylon’s conquest of Judah, sending the Jews into the 70 years of exile.

The fast commences at dawn and remains in force until sunset. Unlike some other fasts, there are no physical restraints (such as the wearing of leather shoes or bathing) associated with the Tenth of Tevet. The sick are exempt from observing the fast, as are pregnant and nursing women.

At services, special prayers are said along with the reading of the Torah.

The Tenth of Tevet
has also taken on other observances not traditionally associated with its historical significance.

Some Jews have chosen the day as a “kaddish day” to commemorate the victims of the Holocaust who have no identifiable anniversaries of their deaths.

The minor festival of the 8th of Tevet (when King Ptolemy of Egypt forced 70 Jewish scholars to translate the Hebrew Bible into Greek) has been quietly subsumed into the Tenth of Tevet, rather than being a distinct remembrance day on its own with its own associated fast.

The 9th of Tevet is said to be the anniversary of Ezra the Scribe, a Jew comparable to Moses in the eyes of some believers. The commemoration of Ezra, and its associated Fast, have also been subsumed into the Tenth of Tevet

Tuesday, December 18, 2007

CENTRALITY OF THE SHEMA


The Shema- a blessing we learn as children. It is the prayer that I assume I will recite as I leave this earth (I certainly say it enough times when I am in an airplane- just in case!!!). Perhaps the Shema's nearness to my heart encouraged me to create this mixed media piece... It is composed of woven paper: one sheet contains the words of the Shema and the second is watercolored. Atop these intertwined pieces I embossed SHEMA.

Jews say two especially important prayers every day: the Shema and the Amidah. We fulfill the biblical commandment (mitzvah) to say the Shema every morning and evening when we say its first verse, "Hear, Israel, the Lord is our God, the Lord is One." The rabbis, however, required us to add three additional paragraphs, drawn from the books of Deuteronomy and Numbers. Besides our reciting the Shema daily, we also say it before going to sleep, over a baby boy the night before his ritual circumcision (brit milah), and before we die.

The commandments to which the Shema refers - tefillin (leather boxes containing parchments that are put on a man's head and arm), mezuzah (a parchment with Torah verses that we put on our doorposts), Tzitzit (fringes that are put on a four-cornered garment), and remembering the Exodus from Egypt - are also part of our daily lives.

Thus, the Shema literally accompanies us from cradle to grave. The Minchat Chinuch explains why the Shema and its mitzvot (commandments) "surround" us: People tend to be drawn to materialism and give in to their lusts by following foolish, worldly pleasures. We need constant reminders that we are part of God's Cabinet and have responsibilities to Him. Without these reminders, we can't keep focused on what God put us here to do. His lovingkindness determined that we should say the Shema twice a day to help us stay on track spiritually.

The general purpose of any mitzvah is to preserve and heighten our spiritual wholesomeness and to attach us to God. Saying the Shema reminds us that our thoughts, speech, and actions affect the entire universe. That, in turn, encourages us to live with ongoing devotion and fervor in our service to the Almighty.

The Shema also refocuses us at least twice a day so that we are not derailed by constant exposure to forces that negate our spirituality. The Shema can help us regain our spiritual bearings and infuse us with tremendous spiritual energy only if we appreciate and concentrate on what we are saying. From Rabbi Lisa AIken... more of this essay can be found here.

Monday, December 17, 2007

Vayechi (Genesis 47:28-50:26)


The Family of Joseph, as depicted by the painter Nathan Moskowitz. "This painting is in essence about Hebraic and Egyptian blessings, shared geometric symbolism and rituals, and the powerful subliminal influence which the colossal visual imagery of Ancient Egypt had on Israelite theology and culture."



Parshat Vayechi (Genesis 47:28-50:26), the final portion of the first book of the Torah, describes Jacob's actions immediately preceding his death in Egypt, beginning with his making Joseph swear to bury him in the land of Israel. Jacob then gives Joseph's two sons, Menashe and Ephraim, a special blessing which confers upon them the elevated status of being two separate tribes amongst the Children of Israel. Notwithstanding Joseph's protest, Jacob insists on giving the younger Ephraim the right-hand position of primacy during the blessing, stating that Ephraim would be greater. Jacob then proceeds to give each of his other sons their individual blessing, in accordance with their own unique character traits and missions. Jacob passes away at the age of 147 and is brought by his sons, accompanied by a great procession of Egyptian royalty, to the land of Israel where he is buried in the M'arat HaMachpelah alongside his wife Leah, parents Isaac and Rebeccah, and grandparents Abraham and Sarah. Upon their return to Egypt, Joseph's brothers fear that he will finally take revenge now that their father is dead. Joseph reassures them that he bears no hard feelings, stating that his being sold into slavery was all part of the Divine plan. The Torah portion concludes with Joseph's death and the Jewish people's promise to carry his bones with them to Israel when they are finally redeemed by Hashem.

Friday, December 14, 2007

Why Evolution is Kosher

I adore going to the zoo... I can spend hours looking at the animals. Among my favorites are the giraffes. Giraffes have exude calm and elegance. This up close and personal shot was photographed by eighteen year old Eran Levi on his recent safari.

And the book? Well, I think it is a good excuse for me to buy a new book for my sons!


Interview by Steven I. Weiss
Natan (Nosson) Slifkin, an Orthodox rabbi known as the “Zoo Rabbi,” writes books about animals and the Bible, and leads tours of zoos all around the globe, which he calls Zoo Torah. Two years ago, Rabbi Slifkin's books were banned by ultra-Orthodox rabbis because they contain statements about science’s take on the age of the earth. In July 2006, Rabbi Slifkin released a new book, “The Challenge of Creation: Judaism's Encounter with Science, Cosmology, and Evolution,” which approaches the controversial topic head-on. While in the United States on his book tour, he spoke with Steven I. Weiss about Judaism, evolution, and the relationship between science and his religious faith.

After having several of your books banned, you're out with a much-expanded and revised edition of “The Science of Torah,” which you've titled “The Challenge of Creation.” What does your new book tell us about science and how it can work with traditional religion that you hadn't said before?

In my new book, I have elaborated upon many other topics, such as other cases in history where Torah scholars confronted challenges from science, the issue of literalism in interpreting Scripture, and questions posed by the existence of ancient civilization. There is also a lengthy discussion of intelligent design, which is a hot topic these days.

You find intelligent design very problematic, not from a scientific standpoint, but a theological one. Why is that?

I am very much in favor of an intelligent designer. But what most people mean with the term intelligent design is that there are certain specific biological phenomena that science can't explain, and that that is where we see God. This is problematic in that it restricts God's role to those things that science can't at present explain--an area that is constantly decreasing in size. I believe that it is important to see God in things that science CAN explain.

That gets to one of the main elements of your thesis--that scientific explanations make one more in awe of God, right?
Absolutely. It is a more sophisticated understanding of God to realize that His greatness is in working in a rational, ordered manner--via the remarkable laws of nature--rather than being some kind of cosmic magician zapping things into existence.

Your books were banned by leading ultra-Orthodox rabbis. What's that been like for you?

Well, of course it was very traumatic. But over time I have come to terms with it, and I have realized that my books are simply not suited to that community. Fortunately, there is a large Orthodox Jewish community which is very receptive to my work.

There are communities that are trying to maintain a very pure and simple religious way of life and do not wish to complicate it by addressing the challenges raised by modern science. My books, on the other hand, are for those who are already engaging the modern world Read more here.

And Shabbat Shalom!

Thursday, December 13, 2007

Crying for that which has not happened


Jeremy Langford, a glass artist whose work we say earlier this week writes:
The Challenge – Art at Judaism’s Holiest Site
Five years ago, the Western Wall Heritage Foundation, along with their architect Eliav Nachlieli, asked me to create a series of monumental glass sculptures for the new visitors’ center at the Western Wall in Jerusalem. My task was to create eight glass sculptures representing the history and development of the Jewish people since their beginnings at the time of the Patriarchs up to the present day return to Israel. This was for me the ultimate artist’s dream, an amazing design challenge at one of the most important religious and cultural sites in the world. At the same time, this was a huge responsibility; I was to create Artwork at the holiest site of Judaism. I was to present the idea of the Jews as a ‘Chain of Generations’ and, therefore, had to find an artistic language that would cut across all boundaries and that people from different backgrounds could relate to. It was decided, therefore, to use an abstract form as a symbol of the Jews. Non-figurative sculpture, something very close to my heart, is a language that can be read on many levels.



Upon revealing himself to his brothers, Joseph embraces Benjamin passionately and they cry on each other's shoulders (Gen. 45:14). Why does the Torah find it necessary to inform us that they cried? There must be some significance, otherwise the Torah would not have mentioned their weeping. Rashi, a French commentator on the Torah, offers an answer to this puzzling question. He explains that Joseph was crying on Benjamin's shoulder because he knew that the two Batei Mikdash, the Holy Temples, which were going to be in Benjamin's portion of land would ultimately be destroyed. Rashi says that Benjamin cried on Joseph's shoulder because he knew that the Mishkan, the famed tabernacle in Shiloh, which would be in Joseph's territory would also be destroyed.

Now that the answer is clear, we must ask yet another question. Why were they specifically crying over the Holy Temples and the Tabernacle at this exact moment in time, right when they were being united after years of separation? It would make more sense for them to be crying because they were overjoyed, filled with love and emotion. Why would they even think about crying over such lofty matters such as the ultimate destruction of the Tabernacle and the Holy Temples?

Before answering this, we must first ask ourselves why those holy structures were destroyed. What, according to our rabbis, is the one sin that lead to the downfall of the Temples and the Tabernacle? Which one character flaw did the Jewish people possess that caused such major destruction? It was the sin of sinat chinam, unwarranted hatred towards others. All Hashem wanted was for people to treat one another with proper respect. It was simply being nice to your fellow Jew.

What connection does that have to Benjamin and Joseph's crying? They both realized that it was because of this sin, hatred towards others, that they had ended up in their bleak situation. It was directly due to the lack of brotherly love that led to Joseph being in Egypt and the current situation at hand. Therefore, they were crying about the destruction of the Temples and the Tabernacle which crumbled because of this same sin.


This Tuesday (December 19th in 2007)is a fast day commerating the besiegement of the city of Jerusalem by Nebuchadnezzar, which ultimately led to the destruction of the First Temple. While at times, depriving oneself of food can be painful, we must come to terms with and realize why we are fasting. Why was the Temple destroyed? Simply, because we weren't nice to each other. We must learn from our past mistakes. Let's all take time out on Tuesday to try to rectify this sin. When we encounter someone, whether it be a spouse, a close friend, or even someone we don't know, try to treat them with respect. Let's shower people with so much kindness that they won't even know how to react. Try it on Tuesday and see how it works. Each and every year, we have this fast. Hashem is testing us to see if we have learned yet. If we are all strong enough and combat such a basic sin, perhaps this year's fast will catapult us closer to Hashem and the ultimate redemption which lies ahead.

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

Chanukah may be over, but I still am glad I am Jewish

When you can't find a picture that "matches" your theme... think pomegranate.

Why I am happy to be Jewish
1. Christmas is one day, same day every year, December 25. Jews also love December 25th. It's another paid day off work. We go to movies and out for Chinese food and Israeli dancing. Chanukah is 8 days.
It starts the evening of the 24th of Kislev, whenever that falls. No one is ever sure. Jews never know until a non-Jewish friend asks when Chanukah starts, forcing us to consult a calendar so we don't look like idiots. We all have the same calendar, provided free with a donation from the World Jewish Congress, the kosher butcher, or the local Sinai Memorial Chapel (especially in Florida) or other Jewish funeral home.
2. Christmas is a major holiday. Chanukah is a minor holiday with the same theme as most Jewish holidays. They tried to kill us, we survived, let's eat.
3. Christians get wonderful presents such as jewelry, perfume, stereos... Jews get practical presents such as underwear, socks, or the collected works of the Rambam, which looks impressive on the bookshelf.
4. There is only one way to spell Christmas. No one can decide how to spell Chanukah, Chanukkah, Chanukka, Channukah, Hanukah, Hannukah, etc.
5. Christmas is a time of great pressure for husbands and boyfriends. Their partners expect special gifts. Jewish men are relieved of that burden. No one expects a diamond ring on Chanukah.
6. Christmas brings enormous electric bills. Candles are used for Chanukah. Not only are we spared enormous electric bills, but we get to feel good about not contributing to the energy crisis.
7. Christmas carols are beautiful...Silent Night, Come All Ye Faithful.... Chanukah songs are about dreidels made from clay or having a party and dancing the hora. Of course, we are secretly pleased that many of the beautiful carols were composed and written by our tribal brethren. And don't Barbara Streisand and Neil Diamond sing them beautifully?
8. A home preparing for Christmas smells wonderful. The sweet smell of cookies and cakes baking. Happy people are gathered around in festive moods. A home preparing for Chanukah smells of oil, potatoes, and onions. The home, as always, is full of loud people all talking at once.
9. Christian women have fun baking Christmas cookies. Jewish women burn their eyes and cut their hands grating potatoes and onions for latkas on Chanukah. Another reminder of our suffering through the ages.
10. Parents deliver to their children during Christmas. Jewish parents have no qualms about withholding a gift on any of the eight nights.
11. The players in the Christmas story have easy to pronounce names such as Mary, Joseph, and Jesus. The players in the Chanukah story are Antiochus, Judah Maccabee, and Matta whatever. No one can spell them or pronounce them.. On the plus side, we can tell our friends anything and they believe we are wonderfully versed in our history.
12. Many Christians believe in the virgin birth. Jews think,"Yossela, Bubela, snap out of it. Your woman is pregnant, you didn't sleep with her, and now you want to blame G-d? Here's the number of my shrink".
13. In recent years, Christmas has become more and more commercialized. The same holds true for Chanukah, even though it is a minor holiday. It makes sense. How could we market a major holiday such as Yom Kippur? Forget about celebrating. Think observing. Come to synagogue, starve yourself for 27 hours, become one with your dehydrated soul, beat your chest, confess your sins, a guaranteed good time for you and your family. Tickets a mere $200 per person. Better stick with Chanukah (original source unknown).

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

Blessed is the match- on the last night of Chanukah


Jeremy Langford whose work I will show again tomorrow, is a glass artist extrordinaire. Born and educated in London, UK, Jeremy Langford today splits his time between The USA, Israel & The UK. Jeremy Langford is recognized as the leading glass artist in Israel today. He is a master glass artist working in over thirty different glass techniques. He creates superbly designed stained glass and sculpted glass for architectural settings and is commissioned to create fine art pieces and Judaica for private collections and museums around the world. His philosophy is to strive for perfection in quality and to 'stretch the limits' of technique and design. His unique approach to art glass work has earned him commissions for prestigious public and residential buildings, synagogues and for a wide range of VIP's and celebrities.

Blessed is the match consumed in kindling flame.
Blessed is the flame that burns in the secret fastness of the heart.
Blessed is the heart with strength to stop its beating for honor's sake.
Blessed is the match consumed in kindling flame.


Blessed Is the Match is the first documentary feature about Hannah Senesh, the World War II-era poet and diarist who became a soldier, martyr and national heroine in Israel. Safe in Palestine in 1944, she joined a mission to rescue Hungary’s Jews. Shockingly, it was the only outside rescue mission for Jews during the Holocaust. Hannah parachuted behind enemy lines, was captured, tortured and ultimately executed by the Nazis. Incredibly, her mother Catherine witnessed the entire ordeal – first as a prisoner with Hannah and later as her advocate, braving the bombed-out streets of Budapest in a desperate attempt to save her daughter.

With unprecedented access to the Senesh family archive, this powerful story unfolds through the writings and photographs of Hannah and Catherine Senesh.

Monday, December 10, 2007

Parsha Vayigash and more dreidels

We never played a lot of dreidel when I was growing up, but since having children it is a very regular part of our Chanukah. Most Chanukah evenings we finish dinner and follw it with a good game of dreidel (we use M+Ms as our gelt to gamble. Sam has a tendency to eat his gelt throughout the game, making it difficult for him to win). The dreidels I show you today are from Itzhak Luvaton, an Israeli artist. His specialty is creating unique Judaica art that combines ancient Jewish tradition with modern design - using an interesting variety of materials. Itzhak's studio is located in Kibbutz Mishmar David. His work is displayed both in his own gallery in Jerusalem and in many galleries around the world.

As my boys get older, they may get a bit bored of plain old dreidel so I think we may have to invest in this more challenging game Texas Dreidel where the dreidel meets poker!


This week's portion Parshat Vayigash (Genesis 44:18-47:27) begins with Judah's impassioned plea to the powerful Egyptian ruler (Joseph still in disguise) for Benjamin's fate, claiming that Jacob would surely die from sorrow if he lost Benjamin. Judah offers to remain in Egypt as a slave in his younger brother's stead. Joseph, unable to restrain himself any longer, reveals his identity to his stunned brothers and forgives them for selling him into slavery so many years before, stating that sending him to Egypt was a part of the Divine plan to prepare for their survival from the famine. Joseph then sends them back to the land of Israel, laden with gifts, to bring Jacob and their families down to Egypt where they will live in the province of Goshen. Before Jacob leaves home, Hashem appears to him in a "vision of the night," reassuring him that He will be with them and that they will eventually return to the land of Israel as a great nation. After twenty-two years of separation, Jacob is finally reunited with his beloved son Joseph, and they are brought to meet Pharaoh. The portion concludes by describing how Joseph uses his vast power to amass nearly all of the wealth of Egypt for Pharaoh's treasury.

Friday, December 7, 2007

Who lights the menorah?

I discovered that XM Satellite radio is doing 8 days of Hanukkah music. You can connect here. I heard some fun stuff this morning


Menorahs and channakiot can be BIG or little.

David Tonnesen created this BIG "Menorah in stainless steel and bronze" for Young Israel Temple in Brookline MA. Daniel Riccio is the artist who designed this truly miniature menorah. Daniel moved from NY to CT and there his skills in jewelry and sculpture began to merge. His sculptures became increasingly intricate and smaller in scale. His work has been enthusiastically received and before long his miniatures are collected across the country.


From Adam Sandler:

This is a song, that uh, theres alot of xmas songs out there, but not
Too many about hanukkah, so I wrote a song for all those nice little jewish
Kids who dont get to hear any hanukkah songs--here we go...

Put on your yalmulka, here comes hanukkah
Its so much fun-akkah to celebrate hanukkah,

Hanukkah is the festival of lights,
Instead of one day of presents, we have eight crazy nights.

When you feel like the only kid in town without a x-mas tree, heres a list of
People who are jewish, just like you and me:

David lee roth lights the menorrah,
So do james caan, kirk douglas, and the late dinah shore-ah

Guess who eats together at the karnickey deli,
Bowzer from sha-na-na, and arthur fonzerrelli.

Paul newmans half jewish; goldie hawns half too,
Put them together--what a fine lookin jew! [esus]

You dont need deck the halls or jingle bell rock
Cause you can spin the dreidl with captain kirk and mr. spock--both jewish!
[esus]

Put on your yalmulka, its time for hanukkah,
The owner of the seattle super sonic-ahs celebrates hanukkah.

O.j. simpson-- not a jew!
But guess who is...hall of famerrod carew--(he converted!)

We got ann landers and her sister dear abby,
Harrison fords a quarter jewish--not too shabby!

Some people think that ebeneezer scrooge is,
Well, hes not, but guess who is:all three stooges. [esus]

So many jews are in show biz--
Tom cruise isnt, [tacit] but I heard his agent is. [esus]

Tell your friend veronica, its time you celebrate hanukkah
I hope I get a harmonica, on this lovely, lovely hanukkah.

So drink your gin-and-tonic-ah, and smoke your mara-juanic-ah,
If you really, really wanna-kah, have a happy, happy, happy, happy
Hanukkah. happy hanukka!

You really can make your dreidel out of clay

Learn how to here.

Here is some additional inspiration.
From TOP to bottom we have Switzerland's Perlengaby and Shlomit, and Squashie of Israel (note the פPeh and not the ש Shin on her sivivonim)




A dreidel is a four-sided spinning top with a Hebrew letter on each side. In America the letters stand for "A Great Miracle Happened There". In Israel the letters mean "A Miracle Happened Here".

The Dreidel game is played by giving each player a number of coins or candy pieces. Before spinning the dreidel, each player puts a fixed proportion of the amount of coins received into the "Kupah" or kitty. Each player in turn spins the dreidel. When the dreidel falls, it will fall on one of the 4 letters. According to the letter, the following will happen:
Nun - no win / no lose
Gimmel - take all (from the kitty)
Heh - take half (from the kitty)
Peh or Shin - lose (what you deposited)

The game continues until players run out of 'funds' or agree to stop (anyone losing all funds is out of the game).

The dreidel game was popular when Antiochus ruled. Jewish people, struggling to keep their faith alive, would gathered together to study the Torah, outlawed by Antiochus. They would keep the dreidel near by so if soldiers appeared they could hide their scriptures and pretend to play with the dreidel. In Israel the dreidel is called a sivivon. The yiddish word "dreidel" is derived from the German word "drehen", or "turn".

And of course we can't forget Naama Zamir!

I would LOVE to see what YOU create.

Thursday, December 6, 2007

Miketz: Joseph and the Evil Eye

Like the evil eye pendant worn by the Hamsa or Hamesh hand, is used as a protective amulet by both Jews and Muslims. The name hamsa is derived from the Semitic root meaning "five." The eye in hand is considered a powerful talisman againt the 'evil eye,' and is usually worn around the neck or hung on walls or over the doors of homes and businesses. These hamsot are from an Israeli of Iraqui descent, Kamy Raviv, who creates her work under the name of “Yad Nee’ma”. The artwork is completely hand-made using metallic yarns, beads and delicate cloths. The works are done individually, slowly and passionately, to portray their message and achieve the illusion of depth.

From Rav Kook:

Rabbi Yochanan, the third century scholar, had an unusual custom. He used to sit down outside the town mikve (ritual bath). This way, he explained, the Jewish women will see me as they leave the bath and will have children as beautiful as me. Rabbi Yochanan's colleagues asked him: Aren't you afraid of the Evil Eye?

"'I am descended from Joseph,' he replied, 'and the Evil Eye had no power over him'" [Berachot 20a].


Apart from the issue of Rabbi Yochanan's beauty, this story raises some interesting questions. What is the Evil Eye? Is it just a primitive superstition? And why was Joseph, more than any other Biblical figure, immune from it?

The Talmud explains that Joseph merited protection from the Evil Eye since "his eye did not wish to benefit from that which did not belong to him." Despite Mrs. Potiphar's attempts to seduce him, Joseph remained faithful to God and his employer. Truly an act of great moral integrity - but what does this have to do with the Evil Eye?

Rav Kook explained that the Evil Eye is an example of how one soul may affect another through unseen connections between them. We are all influenced by our environment. Living among those who are refined and righteous will have a strong positive effect upon us, while living among the crass and corrupt will have a negative one. The Evil Eye is the venomous impact from malignant feelings of jealousy and envy of those around us.

A person who has hardened his inner resolve and does not allow himself to be misled from the correct path, despite pressures from others - he has built a 'firewall' protecting his soul from external influences. The Biblical hero who most prominently symbolizes this strength of character and refusal to be led astray is Joseph. Seventeen years old, young and handsome, estranged from the protective framework of his own family and culture, a slave propositioned by a powerful and attractive woman - Joseph beat all the odds and remained faithful to his ideals. Joseph determined that he would not be swayed by his surroundings, no matter how persuasive. Through his heroic actions, he merited that the Evil Eye would have no power over him and his descendants.

Wednesday, December 5, 2007

Any way you spell it, it's CHANUKAH!!!

Art can be found anywhere- even on a 1" square area on the front of an envelope. The dreidel stamp, released in 2004 was a collaberation between Ethel Kessler and Greg Berger. The former is an art director who has worked extensively for the USPS and the latter was the typographer who designed the graphics and font for the stamp. The stamp below was designed by Hannah Smotrich and in 1996 was jointly issued by Israel and the United States.

On the first
day of Hanukkah my true love gave to me,
Lox, bagels and some cream cheese
.
On the second day of Hanukkah my true love gave to me,
2 Kosher pickles and
Lox, bagels and some cream cheese
.
On the third day of Hanukkah my true love gave to me,
3 pounds of corned beef
2 Kosher pickles and
Lox, bagels and some cream cheese
.
On the forth day of Hanukkah my true love gave to me,
4 potato latkes
3 pounds of corned beef
2 Kosher pickles and
Lox, bagels and some cream cheese
.
On the fifth day of Hanukkah my true love gave to me,
5 bowls of chicken soup
4 potato latkes
3 pounds of corned beef
2 Kosher pickles and
Lox, bagels and some cream cheese

.
On the sixth day of Hanukkah my true love gave to me,
6 pickled herrings
5 bowls of chicken soup
4 potato latkes
3 pounds of corned beef
2 Kosher pickles and
Lox, bagels and some cream cheese
.
On the seventh day of Hanukkah my true love gave to me,
7 noodle kugels
6 pickled herrings
5 bowls of chicken soup
4 potato latkes
3 pounds of corned beef
2 Kosher pickles and
Lox, bagels and some cream cheese
.
On the eighth day of Hanukkah my true love gave to me,
8 Alka-Seltzer
7 noodle kugels
6 pickled herrings
5 bowls of chicken soup
4 potato latkes
3 pounds of corned beef
2 Kosher pickles and
Lox, bagels and some cream cheese

Tuesday, December 4, 2007

Had to add this...





From the most wonderful knitting Jewess I know (sorry Mom)... TIKKUN KNITS

OH MY MARCIA- SO MANY MENORAHS!!!







Happy, Happy Chanukah to you all!

Brotherly Loveliness


I love stained glass. Maybe one day I will dabble in that arena. The Lower Merion Synagogue renovated its synagogue sanctuary in 2003. Included in the renovation were windows representing the tribes- or Joseph's brothes. The illustrations on the windows are based largely on the 1955-1956 Israeli stamp set depicting the twelve sons of Jacob A wonderful essay describing the work can be found here. Below is the window for brother Issachar.

The drought and the famine that occupy this and the following parshah raise the whole issue of the ethical and moral treatment of basic foods and essential goods and services in any economy. The moral issue is who is to be responsible for the steps that need to be taken in order to alleviate the suffering and hardship that result from shortages or disasters. Should every person be left to his or her own choice and device in order to find protection or does society have a responsibility in this area? This question applies irrespective of whether it is natural disaster, war or economic disruption that cause damage, shortages or famine.

In all cases, it is clear that Judaism argues that in the last resort, society has an obligation to protect through coercion and education, the basic needs of those unable to provide for them-selves in this respect, irrespective of the cause. This flows primarily from the communal-national nature of Judaism but also from the wisdom that egoism and selfishness necessarily limit the power of personal philanthropy to solve questions of such magnitude. It is not surprising therefore to find halakhic rulings and communal enactments that come to do exactly that. It should be borne in mind that in such legal and communal intervention, the rabbis knowingly distort the market forces that they were familiar with and even generally accepted as efficient, essential and moral.

Generally speaking we can discern 4 forms of intervention:

Restrictions on Marketing.

"One may not earn twice on the sale of eggs" (Baba Bathra, 91a). In the ensuing discussion there emerges a difference of opinion between the two sages Rav and Shmuel as to the meaning of the word "twice;" the first referred it to 100% profit and the second to the middlemen in the chain of marketing; most authorities hold the latter opinion. Similarly, while Maimonides rules that the injunction refers specifically to eggs, the majority opinion presented in the Shulchan Arukh, sees eggs as only an example and therefore extended the injunction to all basic foods (Choshen Mishpat,section 231). "A person may not earn a livelihood in Eretz Yisrael by trading in basic commodities" In those places, however, were oil is plentiful, it is permissible to earn one's livelihood from trade in it" (Talmud op. cit). Such restrictions by preventing middlemen should ensure that prices would not be inflated thereby. However, where extensive distribution by middlemen is to the benefit of the consumer it is quite permissible to do. We see this in the distinction made in that same Talmudic source between those who simply traded in unchanged goods and those who packaged or transported these goods and therefore made a real economic contribution that permitted them to trade in these goods.

Find the rest of this essay from the Business Ethics Center of Judaism here.

Monday, December 3, 2007

Parsha Miketz


Andy Zermanski has painted for years, since childhood and now is a prolific designer of needlepoint canvases. The pain of the young Pharoah unable to interpret his own dreams is evident in this painting.



From Genesis 41.1-44.17

The Joseph saga continues. Pharaoh has had two similar dreams and demands their interpretation. None of his advisors can determine their meaning, but his wine steward remembers Joseph from prison and his gift for dream interpretation. Joseph is brought from the prison before Pharaoh. Joseph interprets Pharaoh's dream as seven years of plenty and the seven years of famine that are about to fall upon Egypt. In addition, he suggests ways to manage the plenty to survive the famine. Impressed with his wisdom, Pharaoh appoints viceroy over all of Egypt. Joseph successfully implements his plan, and is married to the daughter of Potiphar and has two sons, Menashe and Ephrayim. As the seven years of famine begin, Jacob sends his sons down to Egypt to seek food. They come before Joseph, who recognizes his brothers, but they do not recognize him. Joseph decides to wait before he reveals himself to them. He demands that they return and bring his youngest brother Benjamin back to Egypt, and to make sure they return, he has Shimon held as a hostage. The brothers do return home and tell their father what happened in Egypt. At first he refuses to allow the remaining child of his beloved Rachel to leave him, but as the famine drags on, he is forced to concede. This time all the brothers return to Egypt. This time Joseph devises a final plot against his brothers. He sends them all back to their home with plenty of food and riches, but he has his personal chalice planted in the Benjamin's bag. After their departure, Joseph sends his steward to accuse them of the theft and bring them back. With a classic cliff-hanger, the parasha ends with the brothers fearfully confronting the angry Egyptian viceroy, not knowing he is their brother.

Sunday, December 2, 2007

New stuff for DrMom


I have some new work to see on my flickr site... Just press the button on the left!
Let me know what you think.
I even have a Judaic piece inspired by SandiLuLu. That has gotten some nice comments as I have worn it around!